Thursday, 14 July 2016

Zlatan Ibrahimovic: Manchester United sign a complicated striker

It was typical of Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

He
was playing against opponents who, earlier that season, had wound him
up so badly that it completely put him off his game. Players who 24
hours earlier had spoken to a newspaper to explain, in detail, how this
imposter was going to be stopped.
The supporters didn't like him. Nothing was going right.
And then, taking possession 40 yards out, Ibrahimovic explodes.
A
dart forward. The acceleration beginning. A quick stepover, round one
opponent, speed increasing. Another stepover. Outside another, back
inside the same man as he tries to recover and then a shot into the
bottom corner from 18 yards.
"He could have passed," recalled one
of the opponents he had left trailing in his wake. "But he had read the
article. It was as if he was saying, 'Forget it guys. It's me'."
Ibrahimovic
was not finished. Initial glee, wide smile, on bended knee, waving an
arm in mock celebration to show how easy it was. Then something else,
more serious, a point to be made. A cup-eared celebration, blowing
kisses to the crowd who were already in a state of fury.
He was 19.

Of course we wanted him

The goal is well known among Swedish fans. The reaction to it new.
It
is part of a documentary 'Becoming Zlatan' to be released in August
that contains remarkable archive footage of Ibrahimovic's early years at
Malmo.
Getting such close access at an early stage of his career
was sheer good fortune for brothers Fredrik and Magnus Gertten, who shot
the footage in 2000 and 2001 as part of a film intended to show the
conflict between young and older players at their beloved Malmo.
They needed a focus for each side of the debate. They had heard of Ibrahimovic and approached him.
"The way he saw it, of course we should make a documentary him," said Fredrik.
"It
suited his self image. He was only 17 but he had a very strong
confidence that he would make it because he had something special."

Who is Zlatan Ibrahimovic?

Born 3 October 1981 in Malmo, Sweden

Began his career in 1999 for local side Malmo FF

Signed for Ajax in 2001 for 8.7m euros

Made his senior international debut for Sweden on 31 January 2001 as a substitute before scoring in his next match

Won two Dutch league titles and one Dutch Cup with Ajax

The Swedish forward also won three consecutive Serie A titles with Inter Milan between 2006 and 2009

Winner of 2013 Fifa Puskas award for best goal of the year

Was named Sweden's male athlete of the year on four occasions

Total appearances/goals: 677/392

International appearances/goals: 116/62

A remarkable honesty

Manchester United's newest recruit has a reputation for saying what he thinks.
Numerous
times in recent weeks he refused to say where he was going, even though
his destination after leaving Paris St-Germain was obvious. Instead he
said he amused himself by reading what was being written and would
eventually let everyone know, at a time of his choosing.
He meant it. When he posted United's badge on Instagram, he even beat his new club to the news by 24 hours.
"We
are not part of the football world," said Gertten. "Our business is
making social and political films. Our initial experience of dealing
with footballers was that nothing of them ever comes out in what they
say. Their words are controlled, boring, nothing.
"Zlatan was
different. Here was a young guy who said interesting things, very honest
things about himself and his emotions. It was so fresh. It made you
feel warm towards him.
"The problem is people don't always like honesty. When someone says what they think it can be painful."

'I am just teasing'

His
Croatian mother and hard-drinking Bosnian father were divorced and
Ibrahimovic lived with the latter on the outskirts of town, moving
regularly to earn the nickname 'gypsy',
His talent was honed on a small shale pitch outside his mum's flat. For him, football was, has been and remains fun.
As
a teenager with Malmo, rather than simply beating opponents much older,
he preferred balancing the ball on his foot and lifting it past them.
To supporters it is magical. To opponents infuriating.
"I am just teasing," he said. "If it's not fun it's not worth playing."

Nearly over before it has begun

Such arrogance does not come without a downside... there were times in his youth when Ibrahimovic seemed unmanageable.
Here
was a kid, accepted by football people at Malmo as having the
capability to become the best they had ever had, whose behaviour was so
bad, even in the notoriously flexible world of football conduct, he
nearly ended up without a club.
School was missed, regularly. He would spark fights in training with his poor discipline. It was the same in matches.
"He simply did not obey the rules," said Gertten.
"There
was a really complex aura around him. He was over the top, aggressive.
He did dirty things. Parts of the Malmo board wanted to kick him out of
the club."

Tough upbringing

When his mum and dad split, Ibrahimovic went to live with his dad, Sefik. His sister stayed with his mum.
The finer points of parenting were lost to Sefik. Frequently, there was beer in the fridge but no food.
In
the documentary, Ibrahimovic explains with pride how he has learned to
cook and fend for himself, all apart from his laundry, which he still
took to his mum.
Yet, despite the hardship, the bond with his father is strong. The need to please obvious.
Remarkably
though, Ibrahimovic's mum only found out her son was moving from Malmo
to Ajax for a club record 8.7m euros in 2001 after seeing it on a
television report. The teenager had asked his dad what he thought of the
Dutch giants, but kept the news that discussions had already taken
place a secret.
"There is a mystery around Zlatan which is hiding some part of him," said Gertten.
"It
goes back to his childhood. You still love your mum and dad but the
child who has a problem at home normally doesn't want to talk about it
because they are trying to protect their family.
"His dad didn't watch him often but you could see what it meant to Zlatan any time he did.
"But his childhood also meant he had to make his own rules. He didn't have the same integration in society as others."

With him, or against

If Ibrahimovic likes someone, the bond endures. However, if feelings go the other way, the dislike lingers.
Leo Beenhakker was the technical director at Ajax who took a chance on the Swede, and Ibrahimovic has never forgotten it.
Louis
van Gaal followed him into the job. Ibrahimovic did not like it, or
him. It is why, had Van Gaal remained at Old Trafford, there was no
chance the 34-year-old would have moved to United.
Jose Mourinho (Inter Milan) good. Pep Guardiola (Barcelona) bad.
"If
you treat him with respect he will treat you with respect," said
Gertten. "If you don't he will be a complicated man for you."
Ibrahimovic's loyalty is underlined by the well-documented scissor-throwing incident involving Mido at Ajax in 2003.
After
a defeat at PSV Eindhoven, the two got into an argument after
Ibrahimovic accused Mido of not passing. In the heated exchange, the
Egyptian, who had been cutting the tape from his socks, threw a pair of
scissors which narrowly missed the side of the Swede's head.
Within 10 minutes, all had been forgiven and the pair were joking about it in a jacuzzi.
Ibrahimovic
was the first person to publicly speak out for his friend. "I made
mistakes in Sweden," he said. "It's a new day. You become older. You
grow up."
And then, to the television journalist posing the
questions, he said: "Have you made mistakes? Nobody is talking about
them because you are only a reporter."

A complex character and the media

We know so much about Ibrahimovic. But what do we really know?
In
the documentary, as a teenager in Sweden, he speaks often about his
girlfriend and the life they will have together in the Netherlands. She
also thinks that is how it will be. Yet when he went to Amsterdam, she
was hardly ever spotted at Ajax and one day he announced, glibly, that
they had split.
Long hours were spent alone at his house in a
small suburb of the Dutch capital - the kind of place perfect for a
young family but completely at odds with the wild child image growing
around him.
"I met him a lot during those early years," said Gertten.
"In
the same year as Ibrahimovic made his debut for Malmo, the papers
started with specialist sports sections. He was born for that. There
were Zlatan headlines every week for a whole year even though Malmo were
in the second division.
"In the beginning he was really flattered but suddenly the newspapers were doing conflict stories.
"When
he got his driving licence he went to the area where the prostitutes
were and pretended to be the police and scared away the customers. It
was a practical joke. But it got headlines. That was shocking for him.
He was upset about it."

All can be resolved with a smile

It is many years since Gertten and Ibrahimovic spoke. The player's
advisors were told of the documentary. They did not obstruct its making,
neither have they assisted.
The material, 15 years old, has been sifted through meticulously, most of it didn't make the cut. What did is compelling.
"I
once read a book by a researcher who did work with kids who ticked all
the boxes for someone who would go to prison," said Gertten. "With the
ones who didn't, one of the things that saved them was the ability to
create positive emotions.
"In that sense, Zlatan's smile has been
a lifesaver. The warmth that comes out of that smile makes people want
to help him. They forgive him things that weren't too smart. That smile
has a magic. It is really strong with him. He can turn everything around
with a smile."